A practical guide to Norway’s common 3‑month notice period, how termination must be done, and what to document to protect your deposit and your housing stability.
Many newcomers are shocked by how strict (and slow) termination can be in Norway. The default rule in the Tenancy Act is often a 3-month notice period ending at the end of a calendar month—unless the contract lawfully says otherwise.
The core concept: notice period
Norway’s tenancy rules include statutory notice periods. If you terminate incorrectly, you may still be liable for rent—so do it cleanly and in writing.
How to terminate safely
- Give notice in writing (email + confirm receipt, or registered letter for high conflict).
- State: contract address, date, and when you believe the tenancy ends.
- Ask for: inspection date, key handover process, and deposit settlement steps.
Move-out documentation (do this even if you’re exhausted)
- Take dated photos/video of every room.
- Do a written condition checklist.
- Keep copies of cleaning receipts if you hire help.
- Get a signed key handover confirmation.
If you have children (single-parent focus)
- Plan the timeline early so you don’t hit school/childcare disruption at the worst moment.
- If you need to move due to safety or urgent reasons, document why and seek advice early.
When disputes happen
If you and the landlord disagree (deposit, damage claims, notice validity), the Husleietvistutvalget (HTU) can handle many tenancy disputes in Norway.
Sources & further reading
Do Better Norge note: In Norway, “I told them verbally” is often worth nothing. Treat termination like a legal step: written notice, receipts, photos, and a clear end date.
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